Americathon

Americathon

US VHS cover for the film
Directed by Neal Israel
Produced by Joe Roth
Written by Phil Proctor &
Peter Bergman (play and adaptation)
Neal Israel &
Michael Mislove &
Monica Johnson (screenplay)
Narrated by George Carlin
Starring John Ritter
Harvey Korman
Peter Riegert
Fred Willard
Jay Leno
Chief Dan George
Zane Buzby
Meat Loaf
Elvis Costello
Howard Hesseman
Music by Tom Scott
Cinematography Gerald Hirschfeld
Editing by John C. Howard
Studio Lorimar
Distributed by United Artists (1979, original)
Warner Bros. (2011, DVD)
Release date(s) August 10, 1979 (USA)
Running time 86 min.
Country U.S.A./West Germany
Language English
Budget Unknown
Box office $6,171,763

Americathon (also known as Americathon 1998) is a 1979 American comedy film starring John Ritter, Fred Willard, Peter Riegert, Harvey Korman, and Nancy Morgan, with narration by George Carlin, based on a play by Firesign Theatre alumni Phil Proctor and Peter Bergman. Others credited in the film include Jay Leno, Meat Loaf, Tommy Lasorda, and Chief Dan George, with a musical performance by Elvis Costello.

The premise of the film is that, sometime in the then-near future (1998), the USA has run out of oil, and many Americans are literally living in their (now stationary) cars and either jog or ride bicycles to travel. The federal government, housed in "The Western White House" (a sub-leased condominium in Marina del Rey, California), is near national bankruptcy and in danger of being foreclosed by a cartel of Native Americans in control of Nike (which has been renamed "National Indian Knitting Enterprise"). President Chet Roosevelt (Ritter) hires television consultant Eric McMerkin (Riegert) to help produce a national raffle. Instead, they decide that the only way enough money can be raised to save America is to run a telethon, and hire TV celebrity Monty Rushmore (Korman) to host it.

The soundtrack features "It's A Beautiful Day" by The Beach Boys, "Get A Move On" by Eddie Money and "(I Don't Want To Go To) Chelsea" by Elvis Costello. Dorothy Stratten appears, uncredited, as one of the stage dancers. John Carradine was to have played "Uncle Sam" in this film, but his scenes were edited.

Contents

Satirical predictions

Since the storyline was set 20 years into the future, several satirical forecasts were made, nearly all of which have since come true:

Cameos & inside jokes

Promotion

A photo novel of the film was also released in 1979.

To promote the movie, in 1979 Ted Coombs roller skated across the United States and back and gained a place in the Guinness Book of World Records.

Home media

The film was made available on VHS and laserdisc in the 1980s by Lorimar Home Video, both of which have been out of print. The home video rights passed to Warner Bros. in the late 1980s as part of their purchase of Lorimar. Warner Home Video made the film available in January 2011 on DVD in widescreen (1.85:1) format as part of their Warner Archive Manufacture-on-demand collection.[1]

Name usage

In 1984, New York City public radio station WNYC sponsored a marathon of American music dubbed "Americathon '84".[2]

References

External links